This page is under development. Comments are welcome, but please load any comments in the comments section at the bottom of the page. Please include your wiki MONIKER in your comment with the same courtesy that I will give you. Its very hard to reply intelligibly without some background of the correspondent. Thanks,gold

gold Here is some eTCL starter code for calculating rectangular antennas from source frequency and other dimensions. The impetus for these calculations was designing rectangular antennas. Most of the testcases involve modeled data, using assumptions and rules of thumb .

The hentenna is a rectangular radio antenna with a cross bar tie for antenna leads. The original hentenna was designed for short wave frequencies on the order of 20 to 50 megahertz. Given a design frequency in megahertz, the various dimensions and proportions of the radio antenna are cut at heigth of wavelength(1/2), width of wavelength(1/6), and cross tie of wavelength(1/10). For simplified calculations, the radio wavelength in meters is equal to the speed_of_light in kilometers per second (300) over the radio frequency in megahertz. For an example of a receiving antenna for 100 megahertz and rounded numbers, the expressions below can be pasted into the eTCL console:

A rectangular radio antenna or hentenna designed for 99.7 mhz was built from half inch copper pipe. The antenna had sufficiently narrow beamwidth to distinguish between two FM broadcast transmitters about 10 degrees azimuth apart. The hentenna has a horizontally polarized output. The horizontal output cancels out some of the urban noise environment, since many broadcast signals are vertically polarized.

Testcases Section

In planning any software, it is advisable to gather a number of testcases to check the results of the program. The math for the testcases can be checked by pasting statements in the TCL console. Aside from the TCL calculator display, when one presses the report button on the calculator, one will have console show access to the capacity functions (subroutines).

Pushbutton Operation

For the push buttons, the recommended procedure is push testcase and fill frame, change first three entries etc, push solve, and then push report. Report allows copy and paste from console.

For testcases in a computer session, the eTCL calculator increments a new testcase number internally, eg. TC(1), TC(2) , TC(3) , TC(N). The testcase number is internal to the calculator and will not be printed until the report button is pushed for the current result numbers (which numbers will be cleared on the next solve button.) The command { calculate; reportx } or { calculate ; reportx; clearx } can be added or changed to report automatically. Another wrinkle would be to print out the current text, delimiters, and numbers in a TCL wiki style table as